The goal of earth-to-earth transportation via starship will necessitate dozens of floating launch points, and production thus would not be able to keep pace from BC, imho. Who knows, that ramp up still seems a few years away at least. I am curious what that thing in the video could possibly be. They'd scrapped starship production @ Cocoa Beach last summer I thought.
This just doesn't look like a starship/SH component, imho. Speculating that it goes inside one makes no sense at all but maybe it is something to do with fuel refining/production (not for kerosene/F9, but some sort of vent is visible in the tweet pictures). Plausibly, if they are in fact building a methelox upper stage for FH, things could get interesting about Cocoa Beach...a lot of words to say I have no clue.
Anyway, some good news on lunar gateway launch selection was announced for FH.
Quote:
Days after SpaceX won a NASA contract to launch a galaxy-mapping space telescope, the space agency has selected Falcon Heavy to launch a small space station to the Moon some four years from now.
Loosely known as Gateway, NASA and a few of its 'centers' have been floating the concept for years partially on its merits as a potential platform to dip toes into crewed deep spaceflight and explore the Moon but mostly as a way to give the bloated Space Launch System (SLS) rocket and Orion spacecraft a destination for destination's sake. Weighed down by an extremely inefficient European Service Module (ESM), NASA couldn't use Orion to replicate its famous Apollo Moon missions if it wanted to.
Lacking the necessary performance to safely place Orion and its astronauts into the Low Lunar Orbit (LLO) optimal for a new round of crewed Moon landings, Orion/ESM on its own is limited to higher, more exotic lunar orbits with less immediate value. As a result, NASA's Lunar Gateway will be delivered to a "near-rectilinear halo orbit" (NRHO) where it will orbit the Moon's poles at altitudes between 3,000 and 70,000 kilometers (1,900-43,000 mi).
IMHO, the stretched cargo fairing looks cool, but we won't see this until at least May 2024.